Book Image

Machine Learning Engineering on AWS

By : Joshua Arvin Lat
Book Image

Machine Learning Engineering on AWS

By: Joshua Arvin Lat

Overview of this book

There is a growing need for professionals with experience in working on machine learning (ML) engineering requirements as well as those with knowledge of automating complex MLOps pipelines in the cloud. This book explores a variety of AWS services, such as Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service, AWS Glue, AWS Lambda, Amazon Redshift, and AWS Lake Formation, which ML practitioners can leverage to meet various data engineering and ML engineering requirements in production. This machine learning book covers the essential concepts as well as step-by-step instructions that are designed to help you get a solid understanding of how to manage and secure ML workloads in the cloud. As you progress through the chapters, you’ll discover how to use several container and serverless solutions when training and deploying TensorFlow and PyTorch deep learning models on AWS. You’ll also delve into proven cost optimization techniques as well as data privacy and model privacy preservation strategies in detail as you explore best practices when using each AWS. By the end of this AWS book, you'll be able to build, scale, and secure your own ML systems and pipelines, which will give you the experience and confidence needed to architect custom solutions using a variety of AWS services for ML engineering requirements.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Part 1: Getting Started with Machine Learning Engineering on AWS
5
Part 2:Solving Data Engineering and Analysis Requirements
8
Part 3: Diving Deeper with Relevant Model Training and Deployment Solutions
11
Part 4:Securing, Monitoring, and Managing Machine Learning Systems and Environments
14
Part 5:Designing and Building End-to-end MLOps Pipelines

Preparing the essential prerequisites

In this section, we will ensure that the following prerequisites are ready before proceeding with setting up our data warehouse and data lake in this chapter:

  • A text editor (for example, VS Code) on your local machine
  • An IAM user with the permissions to create and manage the resources we will use in this chapter
  • A VPC where we will launch the Redshift Serverless endpoint
  • A new S3 bucket where our data will be uploaded using AWS CloudShell

In this chapter, we will create and manage our resources in the Oregon (us-west-2) region. Make sure that you have set the correct region before proceeding with the next steps.

Opening a text editor on your local machine

Make sure you have an open text editor (for example, VS Code) on your local machine. We will copy some string values into the text editor for later use in this chapter. Here are the values we will have to copy later in this chapter:

  • IAM sign-in link, username...